Google Wallet Now Tracks Your Packages — Here's What You Need to Know
So Google just dropped a new feature in Wallet that’s actually pretty useful — package tracking. I saw this and thought, wait, wasn’t this a thing before? I swear PayPal had something like this years ago. Or maybe I’m mixing things up. Either way, Google’s doing it now, and honestly, I think it’s better coming from them.
For context: Apple Wallet has offered package tracking for a while now through the Apple ecosystem. Google is playing catch-up here, but their approach works across platforms since it scans your Gmail directly.
Here’s how it works. Google scans your Gmail inbox, picks up on digital receipts and tracking numbers, then boom — your upcoming deliveries show up right in Google Wallet, sitting next to your credit cards and passes. You don’t have to do anything:
- No manual entry — it auto-detects tracking numbers
- No separate app — it’s already on your phone
- No inbox mess — your Gmail stays untouched
Setting it up is simple: Install or update the Google Wallet app, then go to Gmail settings and enable “Google Workspace smart features.” It’s a one-time setup, and after that, everything works automatically.
I’ve been using dedicated shipment trackers for ages — you know, the apps that aggregate all your packages in one place. They’re fine, but they’re a separate app you have to remember to open. Having this built into Wallet means it’s already integrated. That’s the kind of convenience I can get behind.
I tested this with a recent Amazon phone case order. Within minutes of getting the confirmation email, the tracking info appeared in my Google Wallet. Pretty seamless experience.
The UI shows your packages on the home screen. You can tap in for more detail, see the full tracking history, and once it arrives, it auto-dismisses. Pretty clean.
One thing worth mentioning: the privacy trade-off. To use this feature, you’re allowing Google to scan your email content. That’s the same scanning they do for ads, but it’s worth noting that this requires deeper inbox access than most people realize. I’m okay with it for the convenience, but it’s your call.
Now, a few things to keep in mind:
- US-only right now — if you’re outside the States, you’re waiting
- Gmail required — you need “Google Workspace smart features” enabled in settings
- Major retailers only — smaller shops? Don’t count on it
Personally, I think this is the kind of feature that should’ve existed years ago. Google has all the data anyway — they’re reading your emails for ads, might as well use it for something actually helpful. It’s not revolutionary, but it’s convenient. And sometimes convenient is enough.
Feature availability may vary by region and device. Details accurate as of July 2026 — check Google’s official announcements for updates.